|
|
|
|
|
|
|
During his March 4, 1905 inauguration, this "Rough Rider" wore a ring that had been worn by Abraham Lincoln |
Teddy Roosevelt
|
|
|
"I'm a little" one of these "short and stout, here is my handle, here is my spout" |
a teapot
|
|
|
Tommy answered "1451 S. Garden St." when his teacher asked what this 1863 speech by Abe Lincoln was |
the Gettysburg Address
|
|
|
The baby animal seen here with its mommy will grow up to be one of these large monkeys |
a baboon
|
|
|
I must admit I would not eat this dish of colored food with meat |
green eggs & ham
|
|
|
A monarch |
(Kate: Uh... [Shakes head])
a queen
|
|
|
On March 4, 1801, he rose before dawn & slipped out of Washington to avoid the inauguration of Jefferson |
John Adams
|
|
|
According to the song title, it "helps the medicine go down, in a most delightful way" |
(Dan: What is sugar?) (Alex: Be more specific.)
a spoonful of sugar
|
|
|
Billy had an eye out the window when Mrs. Hinkle told the myth of Odysseus & one of these one-eyed giants |
a cyclops
|
|
|
This mountain dweller seen here was once found all over North America |
a mountain lion
|
|
|
The doctor was born before "the Great War", in this "Bay State"'s Springfield, in 1904 |
Massachusetts
|
|
|
This was invented to remove cold cream but was remarketed as the "handkerchiefs you can throw away" |
Kleenexes
|
|
|
On January 8, 1835 this man known as "Old Hickory" became the only president to pay off the national debt |
Andrew Jackson
|
|
|
He "lived by the sea and frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called Honah Lee" |
Puff the Magic Dragon
|
|
|
John went to lunch early & missed that Capt. Cook was killed in the Sandwich Islands, now this U.S. state |
Hawaii
|
|
|
This furry creature seen here has a musical instrument in its name |
(Kristin: What is an... Arctic seal?)
the harp seal
|
|
|
"On the faraway island of Sala-Ma-Sond" this guy, a turtle, "was king of the pond" |
Yertle the Turtle
|
|
|
The person who writes a film is said to "write for" this |
screen
|
|
|
In 1989 this president dispatched troops to help clean up the Exxon Valdez oil spill |
George Bush
|
|
|
It includes the lines "Dinah, won't you blow, Dinah, won't you blow, Dinah, won't you blow your horn?" |
"Working On The Railroad"
|
|
|
Toby told his mom it was a snow day so he missed finding out that these icy masses dug out the Great Lakes |
glaciers
|
|
|
You might see one of these wild canines during your visit to L.A. |
(Kate: What is a fox?)
a coyote
|
|
|
For a lifetime of work & writings so wise, in 1984, he won this type of "Prize" |
a Pulitzer
|
|
|
In a children's story, author Margery Williams' rabbit was this material before a fairy made it real |
(Kate: What is the [*] rabbit?)
velveteen
|
|
|
His mother, Miss Lillian, was a registered nurse in Georgia & a Peace Corps volunteer in the mid-1960s |
Jimmy Carter
|
|
|
It's the question that precedes "do they wobble to and fro, can you tie them in a knot, can you tie them in a bow" |
"Do your ears hang low?"
|
|
|
Jack was sent to the principal after telling the science teacher one of these held a prisoner instead of a nucleus |
a cell
|
|
|
O, yes, this tree-climbing feline seen here would fit into a "STARTS WITH 'O'" category |
(Dan: What is an... ot--no, a...)
an ocelot
|
|
|
A zebra, a rajah & other things neat, & to think that he saw them on this title "Street" |
Mulberry
|
|
|
It's considered unlucky in superstition, but it's the number of the amendment that freed the slaves |
thirteen
|
|